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Date:      Mon, 21 Jan 2008 17:52:55 +0100
From:      Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky@c2i.net>
To:        Steve Anelay <steve@anelay.net>
Cc:        freebsd-usb@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Problem with USB4BSD on DesktopBSD 1.6 (i386)
Message-ID:  <200801211752.56203.hselasky@c2i.net>
In-Reply-To: <4790AE22.3090005@anelay.net>
References:  <1200508961.6490.9.camel@tek-patrol.DISTROSHACK> <200801162029.45471.hselasky@c2i.net> <4790AE22.3090005@anelay.net>

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On Friday 18 January 2008, Steve Anelay wrote:
> Hans Petter Selasky wrote:


> Jan 17 18:41:33 TekBSD kernel: umass0:umass_cam_action:
> 11:0:0:XPT_SCSI_IO: cmd: 0x1e, flags: 0xc0, 6b cmd/0b data/32b sense
> Jan 17 18:41:33 TekBSD kernel: umass0:umass_bbb_dump_cbw: CBW 7: cmd =
> 6b (0x1e0000000100), data = 0b, lun = 0, dir = out
> Jan 17 18:41:33 TekBSD kernel: umass0:umass_transfer_start: transfer
> index = 8
> Jan 17 18:41:33 TekBSD kernel: umass0:umass_bbb_dump_csw: CSW 7: sig =
> 0x53425355 (valid), tag = 0x00000007, res = 0, status = 0x01 (failed)

Hi,

When you see "failed" in the log that means a SCSI command failed. To me it looks like the following command failed:

#define PREVENT_ALLOW           0x1e

Can you find more failed commands ?

> The usb sticks I'm using are two corsair flash voyagers 4GB (16mb/s) and
> one generic 2GB stick (12mb/s).

Isn't this brand supposed to be super-fast ?

>
> I'm not sure what you mean when you say there is a way to nice/throttle
> USB transfers now.  How would I do that?

By inserting a line of code, you can make the USB transfer execution go slower. It doesn't look like that is the problem.

--HPS


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